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Dennis G. Peters, 82, a beloved chemistry professor at Indiana University, died on April 13 from complications related to COVID-19. He was just days away from celebrating his 83rd birthday. Peters contracted COVID-19 while he was hospitalized for an injury that occurred during spring break. Peters was Herman T. Briscoe Professor of Chemistry at Indiana University, and was teaching until his injury occurred.

William F. Carroll Jr., an adjunct professor at Indiana University and a past president of the American Chemical Society, says he was heartbroken to hear the news of Peters’s passing. Peters was Carroll's research adviser in graduate school.

“What do you say about a man who taught intro chemistry for 57 years, essentially 113 consecutive semesters and more than 15,000 students,” Carroll says. “What do you say about a guy who wrote or co-wrote 5 textbooks that were successful in selling well over 140,000 copies who then used most of the money from the sales of the books to fund things in the laboratory? If we needed a piece of equipment and we didn’t have a grant for it, Dennis would reach into his own pocket.”

Carroll says Peters instilled in him a sense of independence and perseverance. “Dennis Peters let me fail, and I needed that,” Carroll says of his graduate school experience. “But he always encouraged me to try again.”

Peters earned a BS in chemistry from California Institute of Technology in 1958 and a PhD in analytical chemistry from Harvard University in 1962. He joined the Indiana University faculty in 1962. He was an ACS member for 63 years.

“Dennis Peters was the most trusted and revered member of the Indiana University chemistry department and, without doubt, its most accomplished and highly regarded classroom lecturer,” says Gary M. Hieftje, Distinguished Professor Emeritus at Indiana University. “He was also the glue that maintained cohesiveness among the faculty involved in analytical chemistry and was in large part responsible for the department to achieve international prominence in that field.”

Peters was also known for his larger than life presence, despite his small stature. “He leapt up from chairs in the graduate chemistry advising office and wowed children and adults alike with flashes of colors and bright fires during Magic of Chemistry programs, clad in a colorful lab coat decorated with chemical illustrations, mathematical formulas and equations,” wrote Joey Bowling in a recent article about Peters in the Indiana Daily Student newspaper.

Carroll says in addition to his passion for teaching, Peters was “a rabid Indiana University basketball fan. He had season tickets for 50 years.” Peters is survived by his nephew, Ruben Portugues and niece, Iliana Portugues.

CORRECTION

This article was updated on April 20, 2020, to indicate that Dennis Peters was William F. Carroll's research adviser, not the other way around.

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Comments

Rosina Georgiadis (April 22, 2020 12:28 PM)

My siblings and sister-in-law, all former IU chemistry students, were very saddened to hear of his death from Holly Willett as we all reminisced during Greek Easter zoom session this past Sunday. I'm thankful that I had a chance to return to IU as a chemistry professor, many years after graduating, to tell Professor Peters in person how much I appreciated his teaching, his stories and also his commitment to students. I reminded him how he had stepped up, when I needed a letter of recommendation to graduate school after one of my references had bowed out at the last minute. To this day, I'm convienced that it was Dennis' letter that made the difference to Berkeley admission committee. From our family to Prof. Peters' family, our most sincere condolences.

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Morton Hoffman (April 22, 2020 12:43 PM)

Here in the Northeastern Section, we also remember Dennis as the 2001 recipient of the James Flack Norris Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Teaching of Chemistry. See . May his memory be a blessing.

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James Rusling (April 22, 2020 3:14 PM)

Dennis and I were involved over the past 20 or more years in administration and symposia of the Electrochemical Society Div. of Organic and Biological Chemistry. We were both at one time Chairpersons of that Division. Dennis was an old school gentleman and scholar, and at the same time a excellent and very approachable mentor and colleague. He was an excellent, down-to-earth role model for faculty and students alike, always ready with a joke or good advice as needed. He will be greatly missed by the Electrochemistry community and by me.